Siem Reap & Angkor

3 days in Siem Reap & Angkor

The minimum itinerary to see Angkor properly — without rushing. Sunrise at Angkor Wat, Bayon and Ta Prohm on the first day, a grand circuit on the second, and Banteay Srei with Tonlé Sap to finish.

Recommended 3-day pass Sunrise Day 1 Banteay Srei Day 3 Tonlé Sap Day 3
The essentials at a glance This itinerary is aimed at travelers who have 3 full days in Siem Reap — whether for a short stay or as the first step of a longer trip to Cambodia. It is designed for a first visit: you see the must-sees in the right order, without ruining them with fatigue. To go further, check out our 7-day itinerary which adds Phnom Penh.
Duration
3 days
Recommended Angkor pass
62 USD (3 days / 10 days)
Budget / day (excluding pass)
50 – 90 USD
Best period
Nov. → Mar.
Main transport
Tuk-tuk
Walking level
Moderate
🎫 Buy your pass the day before

The Angkor Enterprise counters open at 5 PM. Buy your 3-day pass (62 USD) the afternoon before your first day of visiting. This avoids a queue on the morning of sunrise and allows you to enter the park directly.

Program

Day by Day

01
Day 1

Sunrise, Angkor Wat & the small circuit

First day, first rule: get up at 4 AM. No matter the fatigue from travel. The sunrise at Angkor Wat is a unique experience, and it cannot be caught later in the morning when the tourist buses arrive.

4:30 AM
Departure from the hotel

Your tuk-tuk driver is waiting in front of the hotel. The trip takes 20-30 minutes from the center of Siem Reap to the park entrance. Bring your Angkor pass purchased the day before and a flashlight or phone light — it is pitch dark upon arrival.

5:15 AM
Sunrise — north pond of Angkor Wat

Position yourself in front of the north reflection pond by 5:15 AM for a good spot. The sky transitions from deep black to purple, then to orange, and the five towers of Angkor Wat emerge as silhouettes in the water. Allow 45 minutes to 1 hour to enjoy the spectacle.

6:30 AM
Visit Angkor Wat — galleries and bas-reliefs

Once the sun is up, enter the temple. The ground floor galleries house 800 meters of continuous bas-reliefs — a giant stone comic strip depicting the battle of Kurukshetra and the churning of the ocean of milk. Allow 1.5 to 2 hours for a respectful visit.

9:00 AM
Breakfast & break

Fresh fruit, coffee, and sandwich vendors are set up at the site exit. Take 30 minutes to rest before continuing. Groups are starting to arrive — it’s the right time to leave.

9:30 AM
Bayon — the faces of Jayavarman VII

2 km from Angkor Wat, in the heart of Angkor Thom, Bayon is probably the most puzzling temple in the park: 216 enigmatic faces carved on 54 towers of sandstone. Take your time to walk around and climb if you are comfortable with steep stairs. Allow 1 hour.

11:00 AM
Ta Prohm — the roots and jungle

Ta Prohm is the temple deliberately left to vegetation — gigantic banyan trees whose roots envelop the stones. Arrive before 11:30 AM to avoid the crowds. It’s photogenic but also extremely busy: head towards the eastern areas of the temple, which are less crowded.

12:30 PM
Return to Siem Reap — lunch break

From 12:30 PM to 2:30 PM, return to the hotel. The heat is overwhelming (35-40°C), and continuing at this hour is exhausting. Lunch in the Wat Bo area or Pub Street, shower and nap. You will need energy for the evening.

4:00 PM
Banteay Kdei & Srah Srang

5 minutes by tuk-tuk from Ta Prohm, Banteay Kdei is less crowded and just as evocative. Right across, the Srah Srang pond is beautiful in the late afternoon with golden light. Allow 45 minutes for both sites.

7:30 PM
Siem Reap Night Market

The Night Market and 60 Street Food Market feature dozens of Khmer cuisine stalls: fish amok, lok lak, dried beef. Friendly atmosphere, very reasonable prices (3-6 USD per dish). The best place for dinner on the first night.

Book for this day
Sunrise tour with guide — Angkor Wat

Departure 4:30 AM, tuk-tuk included from your hotel, English or French-speaking guide. Free cancellation 24 hours in advance. Angkor pass not included — to be purchased separately.

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02
Day 2

The grand circuit — temples of the northeast & sunset

The grand circuit (about 26 km) includes the less frequented temples of the park. Less iconic than Angkor Wat, they are often more authentic: covered in moss, few groups, an adventurous atmosphere. Departure later than the day before — enjoy a well-deserved lie-in.

7:30 AM
Departure — Preah Khan

Preah Khan, 5 km north of Bayon, is a vast monastic and educational complex from the 12th century. Its endless corridors, successive doorways, and encroaching vegetation make it one of the most atmospheric temples in the park. Allow 1.5 hours.

9:30 AM
Ta Som & Neak Pean

Ta Som is a small two-part temple — its east-north gate is famous for the tree that has exploded the lintel. 5 minutes away, Neak Pean is an island temple surrounded by ponds symbolizing the mythical Himalayan lakes. Allow 1 hour for both.

11:00 AM
Pre Rup — the pyramid temple

Pre Rup is a red brick and sandstone mountain temple from the 10th century, avant-garde for its time. Its steep stairs lead to a terrace with a panoramic view of the Angkor plain. Ideal in late morning to enjoy the light. Allow 45 minutes.

12:30 PM
Lunch break in Siem Reap

Return to town for lunch and a midday break. The Wat Bo Road area and the Old French Quarter offer excellent restaurants: refined Khmer cuisine, air-conditioned cafes. Avoid leaving before 2:30 PM.

3:00 PM
Baphuon & Terrace of the Elephants

In Angkor Thom, Baphuon is a recently restored mountain temple whose west face hides a 70-meter long reclining Buddha — difficult to perceive up close, spectacular from the stairs. The Terrace of the Elephants and the Terrace of the Leper King, nearby, deserve an additional 45 minutes.

5:00 PM
Sunset — Phnom Bakheng

Phnom Bakheng is a hill overlooking the Angkor plain, with an unobstructed view of Angkor Wat in the background. Access is now limited to 300 people at a time — arrive by 4:30 PM to ensure you can climb. The ascent takes 15 minutes on foot. Spectacular if the sky is clear.

7:30 PM
Dinner in the Wat Bo area

Wat Bo Street hosts some of the best contemporary Khmer cuisine restaurants in the city: Cuisine Wat Damnak, Sugar Palm, Malis. Book the day before if you choose a high-end restaurant. Budget: 15-40 USD/person depending on the place.

Book for this day
Grand Angkor circuit by tuk-tuk with guide

Preah Khan, Ta Som, Neak Pean, Pre Rup — a full day with a dedicated driver-guide. Free cancellation 24 hours in advance. Angkor pass not included.

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03
Day 3

Banteay Srei & floating village of Tonlé Sap

On the third day, two opposing faces of Cambodia: in the morning, the masterpiece of Khmer sculpture perched north of the Angkor plain. In the afternoon, an entire village built on the waters of Tonlé Sap — the largest lake in Southeast Asia, which swells visibly during the monsoon.

7:00 AM
Departure to Banteay Srei

Banteay Srei is located 38 km northeast of Siem Reap, about a 45-minute drive. Leave early to arrive around 8 AM, before the heat and tourist buses. Your tuk-tuk is sufficient for this trip — or opt for a van if traveling with family.

8:00 AM
Banteay Srei — the pink sandstone jewel

Small in size but immense in richness: Banteay Srei (10th century) is carved from pink-coral sandstone with an almost creamy texture. The sculptures of deities, demons, and celestial nymphs reach a level of detail that archaeologists consider the pinnacle of Khmer art. Allow 1.5 hours to enjoy it at a leisurely pace.

10:00 AM
Return to Siem Reap — lunch break

Return to town for lunch and prepare for the afternoon. If you have time, take a quick stop at the Angkor National Museum (a beautiful museum on Khmer history, 12 USD) or enjoy a massage before heading out again.

2:00 PM
Kampong Phluk — floating village of Tonlé Sap

16 km south of Siem Reap, Kampong Phluk is a village of 3,000 inhabitants built on stilts 7 to 8 meters high. In the dry season, the houses dominate a dried mangrove forest. In the rainy season, they float above the water. A canoe takes you between the houses, the school, the pagoda — a Khmer Venice off the tourist track. Allow 2.5 hours.

4:30 PM
Return to Siem Reap

Return by tuk-tuk or van to downtown. Last hour of shopping at Phsar Chas (the old market) or in the craft galleries of Kandal Village if you are looking for quality souvenirs.

7:00 PM
Last dinner — Phsar Nightly or restaurant

For your last evening, treat yourself to a nice dinner. Marum (a training restaurant for young Cambodians) and Haven are two must-visit addresses. Or keep it simple with a bowl of fish amok at the night market — the national Khmer dish, melting and flavored with galangal.

Book for this day
Banteay Srei + Tonlé Sap floating village tour

Banteay Srei in the morning, canoe on Tonlé Sap in the afternoon — a combined tour from Siem Reap with guide, transport, and canoe included. Free cancellation 24 hours in advance.

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Estimation

Budget for 3 days

These estimates are per person, excluding airfare and accommodation. The US dollar is the common currency in Siem Reap — prices are displayed in USD in almost all restaurants, hotels, and tourist sites.

3-day Angkor pass
62 USD
Tuk-tuk (3 days)
60 – 90 USD
Meals (average budget)
15 – 30 USD/day
Guided activities (GYG)
30 – 60 USD/day
Beng Mealea (if added)
5 USD
Estimated TOTAL / person
250 – 380 USD
💡 Accommodation in Siem Reap

Siem Reap offers a remarkable range of accommodations: guesthouses at 15-25 USD/night in the center, boutique hotels at 50-80 USD, and some luxury hotels at 150 USD and more. The Wat Bo area and the center (around the Old Market) are the best areas to be within walking distance or tuk-tuk distance from restaurants and the night market.

Local tips

What we wish we had known beforehand

👗

Shoulders and knees covered

Mandatory in all temples. Many tourists are turned away at the entrance of Ta Prohm or Bayon. A light scarf or sarong (2-3 USD on site) is the most practical solution.

🌡️

Leave early, return at noon

Visit the temples from 5 AM to 12 PM, then return to rest. Resume around 3 PM-4 PM. The heat from 12 PM to 3 PM (35-40°C in the dry season) is exhausting, especially when walking on stones without shade.

💧

Constant hydration

Minimum 2 liters of water per person per half-day. Vendors offer fresh water inside the park at reasonable prices (1 USD for a 1.5 L bottle). Don’t wait until you’re thirsty to drink.

📸

For sunrise: arrive at 5:15 AM

The best spot for photos is the north pond (to the left upon entering). Arrive at 5:15 AM for a good spot. Avoid selfie sticks and flashes in the face of other visitors — the place deserves a minimum of respect.

🛺

Negotiate your tuk-tuk in advance

Ask your hotel to recommend a trusted driver. Agree on the price and itinerary the night before. 25-30 USD for a full day in the park, 40-50 USD for Banteay Srei, is a fair rate in 2026.

📱

eSIM or local SIM card

The 4G network covers the entire Angkor park. Google Maps works perfectly for navigating between the temples. Opt for an eSIM before departure (Airalo, Holafly) or buy a local SIM card at the airport for 5-8 USD.

Questions fréquentes

Tout ce qu'on nous demande

Yes, 3 well-organized days allow you to see the essentials without frustration. You will cover Angkor Wat, Angkor Thom (Bayon, Baphuon, terraces), Ta Prohm, the temples of the grand circuit, Banteay Srei, and a glimpse of Tonlé Sap. To go further (Beng Mealea, Koh Ker, Sambor Prei Kuk), you need 4-5 days. The risk with 2 days is rushing through the most visited sites without truly understanding them.

The 3-day pass at 62 USD is the obvious choice for this itinerary. It is valid for 10 consecutive days — so you can take a rest day between visits if you're tired. Buy it the day before your first day at the Angkor Enterprise counters (open from 5 PM), which saves you from waiting in line on the morning of sunrise.

Yes, as long as you adapt the schedule and distances. Children under 12 enter the park for free. Angkor Wat and Bayon fascinate curious children. Ta Prohm with its giant roots is often their favorite. Avoid sites with very steep stairs (Pre Rup, Phnom Bakheng) with young children. Consider an air-conditioned van instead of a tuk-tuk for Banteay Srei (38 km of road).

The new Siem Reap International Airport (SAI, opened in October 2023) is located about 50 km from the city center, which takes 40-50 minutes. Plan for a private transfer booked in advance (25-35 USD) rather than a taxi at the arrivals exit. Welcome Pickups or your hotel can arrange the pickup. The old airport is now closed to commercial flights.

Yes, a visa is mandatory for almost all nationalities. For French, Belgian, Swiss, and Canadian citizens, the simplest option is the official e-visa (30 USD, 30 days, tourist) to be requested at evisa.gov.kh — processing time is 3 business days. The visa on arrival (35 USD) is also possible at international airports. Check our complete visa guide.

Extend the journey

After Siem Reap — where to go?